Tag Archives: dc4rd
The Feds Want More Housing! But what type of housing? Videos.
Fudge: “Everybody in the country knows we have a crisis of affordable housing. But the only way to get costs down is to assist developers and builders in building more homes. If we don't put more supply on the market the prices are not going to go down. … Help us find ways to deal with our zoning and our restrictions, so we can streamline the process.”
===
Questions:
- How does Ms. Fudge define “affordable” housing? Doesn't HUD say that folks making 120% of the AMI could qualify for an “affordable” unit? In DC, an individual making more than $120k/yr could qualify for an “affordable” unit under HUD's definition. Why is this acceptable?
- Is it true that the ONLY way to get costs down is to build MORE housing? What kinds of housing? Housing for whom? How about decommodifying alternatives: Social Housing, CLT's, etc.
- When she says, “If we don’t put more supply on the market, the prices are not going to go down” what parts of the housing market is she talking about – Do we need more single family homes, or more of the steady increase in studios/one bedrooms?
- Her statement about finding “ways to deal with our zoning … restrictions” … Is that a euphemism of ending community input and just allowing “developers and builders” to just keep building whatever they want wherever they want per the status quo without any basic planning protocols in place?
===
Contrast the above video, with this Adams Curtis video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BAwH7R5ljo8
“This is the normal world. You go to work in a city. All around you are enormous new buildings. They look alike. You will never be able to afford to live in them because they are not really homes. They are blocks of money bought by global investors whose money has nowhere else to go.”
And, consider these points/analysis posts about housing production in DC:
http://www.dc4reality.org/updates/687
• Compare and Contrast: Growth & Displacement
http://www.dc4reality.org/updates/612
The eclectic reality of development, racism, displacement, and dogma in DC: Supply & Demand Ain’t It
- Dozens Of Tenants In This Rent-Controlled Building Are Facing Eviction, DCist, Apr 14, 2023, https://dcist.com/story/23/04/
14/woodner-apartments- eviction-tenant-union/ - Why the pace of rising DC-area rents has slowed, WTOP, March 20, 2023, https://wtop.com/business-
finance/2023/03/why-the-pace- of-rising-dc-area-rents-has- slowed/ - Without COVID-Era Protections, Evictions In The Region Are Ticking Up, DCist, Oct 11, 2022, DCist, https://dcist.com/story/22/10/
11/evictions-dc-md-va-rising- covid-protections/ - The D.C. Housing Authority Pays Top Dollar To Landlords In Wealthy Areas. Some Say That’s Bad Policy. DCist, Sep 13, 2022, https://dcist.com/story/22/09/
13/dc-housing-vouchers-rent- control/ - As Part Of Historic Investment, Bowser Announces Funding For 11 New Affordable Housing Projects, DCist, Aug 11, 2022, https://dcist.com/story/22/08/
11/mayor-bowser-announces-11- affordable-housing-projects- with-housing-production-trust- fund/ - D.C. development has soared under Bowser. So have housing costs. Washington Post, June 16, 2022, https://archive.ph/b7Lpi
- In a once-gritty D.C. market, these wholesalers’ world is slipping away, Washington Post, June 18, 2021, https://archive.ph/daQtm
- Capital Checkers Is Looking For A New Home After 40 Years In Shaw, DCist, Mar 8, 2021, https://dcist.com/story/21/03/
08/capital-checkers-losing- shaw-clubhouse/ - As D.C. Activists Push To Expand Rent Control, A Tool To Keep Track Of It Has Been Delayed For Years, DCist, Dec 21, 2020, https://dcist.com/story/20/12/
21/dc-rent-control-database- delayed/ - Facing Decrepit Conditions, Another D.C. Apartment Building Goes On Rent Strike, DCist, Oct 15, 2018, https://dcist.com/story/18/10/
15/another-brightwood-park- building-be/ - Interactive Map: Average Rents Increase Near 61 Of 91 Metrorail Stops, DCist, May 30, 2017, https://dcist.com/story/17/05/
30/interactive-map-average- rents-incre/ - Report: How Hard Is It To Find Affordable Housing In D.C.? Almost Impossible. DCist, Mar 12, 2015, https://dcist.com/story/15/03/
12/lack-of-affordable-housing/ - Median rental price for a one-bedroom D.C. apartment is $2,000, study says, Washington Post, March 12, 2015, https://archive.ph/kmlaj
—

#BuildMore :: Without Any Race or Class Analysis



How is any of this acceptable to you Greg or for anyone holding any of the levers of power to change things immediately, why isn’t it getting done? Meanwhile the harm persists and you want to rail against those pointing it out and trying to find solutions. Make it make sense. Please.

How does DC Define “Affordable” Housing
Sources:
* Report, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser, “Inclusionary Zoning Annual Report for Fiscal Year 2021” dated January 9, 2023, https://lims.dccouncil.gov/downloads/LIMS/52021/Introduction/RC25-0002-Introduction.pdf
* Article, Washington Business Journal, “D.C.'s inclusionary zoning program not benefiting lowest-income households, report finds” by Tristan Navera, February 6, 2023, https://archive.ph/ghkMx

IZ Chart source: https://dhcd.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dhcd/publication/attachments/2022-6-24%20IZ%20ADU%20price%20schedule.pdf
2. Beyond the IZ fail, recent reports show that DC's Housing Production Trust Fund has been similarly serving for the most part moderate income single professionals making $60,000+/yr. And, this fact stands in the face of law requiring that the majority of the HPTF monies are to subsidize housing for the lowest income earners (aka those making the living wage annually or less).
Sources:
Sources:
* DC Zoning Commission Case Nos. 11-03, A-K (https://app.dcoz.dc.gov/Home/ViewCase?case_id=11-03)
* Tweet, DC for Reality, “Let's not get it confused. When anyone (the Mayor; Developers, anyone) touts a project has 'affordable housing it may likely mean housing for individuals making $80-$120k a year as currently defined! DC needs to do better” dated February 10, 2023, https://twitter.com/dc4reality/status/1624111925494706177
- It's these stats that show why in DC “affordable” housing isn't actually affordable and why many of our residents are vulnerable to displacement and why many folks have to set up homes in tents.
- There are solutions to DC's malformed definition of “affordability” — one such is the Social Housing model. Another, perhaps faster solution is for DC policy to be clearly shifted to define affordability as a percentage of DC-only incomes.
The Filthy Truth About Subway Air
The rubbing of metal wheels on tracks, or brakes on wheels, shears off tiny metal particles that get kicked up into the air as trains move.
